Team:Paris Bettencourt/Human Practice/Overview
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- | <b> | + | <b>Methodology</b> |
#'''''Interviews with experts''''' which enabled us to have a broad overview of the state of the art. [https://2012.igem.org/Team:Paris_Bettencourt/Human_Practice/Interview Read More] | #'''''Interviews with experts''''' which enabled us to have a broad overview of the state of the art. [https://2012.igem.org/Team:Paris_Bettencourt/Human_Practice/Interview Read More] | ||
#'''''Interaction with high-schoolers''''' to have first-hand appreciation of reactions from first exposure to synthetic biology | #'''''Interaction with high-schoolers''''' to have first-hand appreciation of reactions from first exposure to synthetic biology | ||
#'''''We screened previous iGEM team’s wikis''''' to trace the evolution of biosafety concerns and devices in the iGEM community, focusing on proposed containment systems. [https://2012.igem.org/Team:Paris_Bettencourt/Human_Practice/WikiScreen Read More] | #'''''We screened previous iGEM team’s wikis''''' to trace the evolution of biosafety concerns and devices in the iGEM community, focusing on proposed containment systems. [https://2012.igem.org/Team:Paris_Bettencourt/Human_Practice/WikiScreen Read More] | ||
- | #'''''We focused on horizontal gene transfer as main generic risk factor'''''. | + | #'''''We focused on horizontal gene transfer as the main generic risk factor'''''. |
- | #''''' | + | #'''''Comprehensive report''''' where we addressed the concerns raised by synthetic biology per se, that is, as a technique. Then, we analyzed the specific concerns that arise from synthetic biology’s potential applications in nature. [https://2012.igem.org/Team:Paris_Bettencourt/Human_Practice/Report Read More] |
<b>Main Conclusions</b> | <b>Main Conclusions</b> | ||
# Societal interaction: | # Societal interaction: | ||
- | #:*'''''The need to raise awareness''''' of synthetic biology in the population so people can decide in the most enlightened way possible | + | #:*'''''The need to raise awareness''''' of synthetic biology in the population so people can decide in the most enlightened way possible what they want from this new technology and of its applications (A), |
#:* '''''The need of a discussion''''' between society’s different protagonists to set goals, define what they would consider as benefits and acceptable risks (B), | #:* '''''The need of a discussion''''' between society’s different protagonists to set goals, define what they would consider as benefits and acceptable risks (B), | ||
# Best research practice: | # Best research practice: |
Revision as of 19:40, 9 October 2012
Aims Human concerns arose organically during the construction of the bWARE containment system, and human practices were intrinsic to every stage of our project. In designing and building our best genetic containment system, we often encountered limits on the ability of science alone to measure our performance. When is a biosafety system safe enough? The answer to this question is partially scientific, to the extent that horizontal gene transfer events can be observed and modeled. But the answer is also social, because ultimately the public will decide if a biosafety system works well enough to use. The only way for us to know if bWARE is a success is in conversation with experts and the community. We propose and implement new ways for iGEM to organize and present biosafety information, both for scientists and the public. We believe our reforms to the BioBrick registry will help synthetic biologists to find the best biosafety tools for their application. We also imagine the beginnings of a quantitative, context-specific biosafety database serving citizen scientists. Practical safety data will feed an informed public forum.
You can find the full list of conclusions here Main Proposals
You can find the full list of proposals here |